Word: throughout
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Coach Donovan expects to hold weekly handicap meets for all candidates throughout the winter. A system of points will be carried through all these meets and, after the final winter carnival, prizes will be awarded holders of high scores...
...them have had an opportunity to supplement the ideals and theories imbibed here with from ten to twenty years' practical experience in dealing with physical training and athletics, perhaps they are justified in adopting the resolution referred to. As a matter of fact the majority of the colleges throughout the country have long recognized the importance of physical training, in theory at least, and made attendance at the gymnasiums more or less compulsory. This would be absolutely necessary if physical training and athletics were to be put on the same footing as the work of other departments. Moreover if attendance...
...recent vote of the Student Council at Harvard recommending to the authorities that intercollegiate athletic contests be at once revived in substantially their old-time form is not merely an indication of undergraduate opinion at one institution. It is in all probability typical of student sentiment throughout the country. And those famliar with the situation are well aware that this sentiment will really determine the issue...
Aeronautics has made wonderful progress during the War and will become one of the great sciences of the future. Perhaps it will not be many years before we see regular aero passenger lines running between the big centres of industry throughout the country. Already a limited mail service has been established. In a short time the Atlantic Ocean will undoubtedly be crossed by a heavier-than-air machine. All kinds of possible uses of the airplane suggest themselves...
...Better 'Ole" purports to represent a faithful picture of Tommy Atkins as made famous through Captain Bairns-father's cartoons. Therefore its chief characteristic naturally is humor, which, blended with some of the softer feelings which find such remarkable expression in the private soldier, is sustained throughout the entire play. A perfectly impossible plot gives the series of seven "splinters" and a "short gas attack" a slight backbone. The story centres about Old Bill's discovery of a German plot, his blowing up of the strategic bridge, and his subsequent court martial and award...